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Starting A New Gardening Era
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Soil
Seed
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Artificial Fertilizers
Selecting And Sowing Seeds
Making And Planting Flower-beds
Watering Plants
Is Cold Water Injurious To Plants?
Atmosphere And Temperature
Insects Upon Plants
Wintering Plants In Cellars
The Law Of Color In Flowers
The Relation Of Plants To Health
Layering
Propagation Of Plants From Cuttings
Grafting
Hanging Baskets
Directions For Filling Hanging Baskets
Wardian Cases
Aquatics Water Lilies
Soil For Growing Aquatic Plants
Hardy Climbing Vines Ivies
Ivies Growing And Training
Annual Flowering Plants Pansy Culture
Pansy Culture
Fall Or Holland Bulbs
Tropical Bulbs Tuberoses
Tuberoses
C Roses Cultivation And Propagating
Tea Roses
Hybrid Perpetual And Moss Roses
Moss Roses
Propagating The Rose
Japan And Other Lilies Calla Lilies
The Calla Lily
How To Prepare Callas For Winter Blooming
Geraniums The Best Twelve Sorts
Double Varieties
Single Varieties
Azaleas How To Cultivate Them
Camellias Orange And Lemon Trees
Orange And Lemon Trees
Fuchsias Training And Management
Cactuses
The Night-blooming Cereus
Propagating Rex Begonias
Rockeries How To Make Them
How To Make A Rockery
Budding
Top-budding Trees
Pruning
Tree Roses
The Lawn
Lawn Vases
Planting Trees
Botanical Names
Frozen Plants
Cutting Grass
An Arch
Bloom
Mildew
Sentiment And Language Of Flowers
The Lime In Soils
Sour Soils
Evidences Of Acidity
Tests For Acidity
Sources Of Lime
Definitions
Ground Limestone
Storing Lime In The Soil
Fresh Burned Lime
Burning Lime
Lime Hydrate
Other Forms Of Lime
Magnesian Lime
What Shall One Buy?
Methods Of Application
Amount Of Lime Per Acre
Special Crop Demands
The Lawn: How To Make It And How To Take Care Of It
Planting The Lawn
Shrubs
Vines
The Hardy Border
The Garden Of Annuals
The Bulb Garden
The Rose: Its General Care And Culture
The Rose As A Summer Bedder
The Dahlia
The Gladiolus
Lilies
Plants For Special Purposes
Arbors Summer-houses Pergolas And Other Garden Features
Carpet-bedding
Flowering And Foliage Plants For Edging Beds And Walks
Planning The Garden
The Back-yard Garden
The Wild Garden A Plea For Our Native Plants
The Winter Garden
Window And Veranda Boxes
Spring Work In The Garden
Summer Work In The Garden
Fall Work In The Garden
The Lawn: How To Make It And How To Take Care Of It
Planting The Lawn
Shrubs
Vines
The Hardy Border
The Garden Of Annuals
The Bulb Garden
The Rose: Its General Care And Culture
The Rose As A Summer Bedder
The Dahlia
The Gladiolus
Lilies
Plants For Special Purposes
Arbors Summer-houses Pergolas And Other Garden Features
Carpet-bedding
Flowering And Foliage Plants For Edging Beds And Walks
Planning The Garden
The Back-yard Garden
The Wild Garden A Plea For Our Native Plants
The Winter Garden
Window And Veranda Boxes
Spring Work In The Garden
Summer Work In The Garden
Fall Work In The Garden
A Chapter Of Afterthoughts Which The Reader Cannot Afford To Miss
Soil Required Its Preparation
General Remarks On Manuring With Green Crops
Varieties
Influence Of Soil On Seedlings
How To Cross Varieties
Smooth Vs Rough Potatoes
Cut And Uncut Seed
Planting And Manuring
Cultivation
Plaster
The Potato-rot Its Cause
Remedy For The Potato-rot
Digging And Storing
Insects Injurious To The Potato
General Remarks On Insects
Value Of The Potato As Cattle Food


Annual Flowering Plants Pansy Culture

from Your Plants



Annuals flower the same season the seeds are sown, perfect their seeds,

and then die. "There is," says James Vick, "No forgotten spot in the

garden, none which early flowering bulbs or other spring flowers have

left unoccupied, that need remain bare during the summer. No bed but

what can be made brilliant with these favorites, for there is no

situation or soil in which some of these favorites will not flourish.

Some delight in shade, others in sunshine; some are pleased with a cool,

clay bed, while others are never so comfortable as in a sandy soil, or

burning sun. The seed, too, is so cheap as to be within the reach of

all, while a good collection of bedding plants would not come within the

resources of many, and yet very few beds filled with expensive bedding

plants look as well as a good bed of our best annuals, like Phlox,

Petunia, or Portulaca, and for a vase or basket many of our annuals are

unsurpassed. To annuals, also, we are indebted mainly for our brightest

and best flowers in the late summer and autumn months.



"Without the Phlox and Petunia, and Portulaca and Aster, and Stock, our

autumn gardens would be poor indeed, and how we would miss the sweet

fragrance of the Alyssum, Mignonette, and Sweet Pea, if any ill-luck

should befall them, or deprive us of these sweet favorites!" Annuals are

divided into three classes, hardy, half-hardy, and tender. The hardy

annuals are those that, like the Larkspur, Candytuft, etc., may be sown

in the autumn, or very early in the spring in the open ground. The

half-hardy annuals should not be sown in the open ground until all

danger of frost is over. The Balsams and Marigolds belong to this class.

The tender annuals generally require starting in a green-house, or

hot-bed, to bring them to perfection, and should not be set in the open

ground until the weather is fine and warm, some time in June. From a

perplexing number to be found in plant catalogues, we select the

following twelve sorts of annuals as being the most desirable for the

garden; they are a galaxy of gems, indeed:



Asters,

Balsams,

Phlox Drummondii,

Double Petunias,

Pansies,

Double Sweet Alyssum,

Double White Pyrethrum,

Dwarf Ageratum,

Verbenas,

Salvias,

Double Stocks,

Celosias (Coxcomb).



Sow the seed in the open ground the latter part of May, and the first of

July most of the sorts will be in bloom, and they will continue to

bloom until arrested by frosts.





Next: Pansy Culture
Previous: Ivies Growing And Training


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